The horrors of early health care and criminal justice live on at these former asylums, reformatories, and prisons.
Up until the mid-20th century, prisons, reform schools, and hospitals for the mentally disabled were eerily similar. Navigating the standards of early medical treatment and criminal reform, these early institutions used brutal tactics to rehabilitate their residents. Even petty crimes could land a man or woman in facilities like the Eastern State Penitentiary in Pennsylvania that regularly used forcible restraint and physical torture to manage its inmates. Life in hospitals like the Trans-Allegheny Lunatic Asylum in West Virginia wasn’t much better. Unable to protest, those suffering from mental illnesses or disabilities were often subject to horrifying procedures and experiments including lobotomies and electroshock therapy. Although most of these early facilities were shut down after the 1970s, a handful have been reopened to the public. Now derelict and crumbling, these creepy abandoned asylums, reformatories, and prisons are lessons in the horrors of human history.